State Ex Rel. Bell v. Phillips Petroleum Co.

160 S.W.2d 764, 349 Mo. 360, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 365
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 16, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 160 S.W.2d 764 (State Ex Rel. Bell v. Phillips Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Bell v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 160 S.W.2d 764, 349 Mo. 360, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 365 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

This is an action for collection of delinquent motor vehicle fuel tax, interest and penalties, under Article 2, Chapter 45, R.S. 1939. A jury was waived and the cause submitted to the court. The court found for defendant on counts 1 and 2 (covering the tax claimed on certain gasoline sold and delivered in this State in 1938 and 1939). Other counts were disposed of by agreement between the parties. Judgment was entered for defendant on counts 1 and 2 and plaintiff has appealed.

The facts, in part stipulated, are as follows: In 1938 and 1939, defendant "was licensed as a distributor of motor vehicle fuels, to-wit, gasoline, in the State of Missouri, and had on file with the State Inspector of Oils its election to pay gasoline tax on the basis provided in Section 7819, R.S. Mo. 1929," (now Section 8437, R.S. 1939, Mo. Stat. Ann., Sec. 7819, p. 5257). It "maintained and operated approximately one hundred two (102) bulk storage plants throughout the State of Missouri. Said bulk plants were used for the purpose of storing gasoline and other products in distributing the same therefrom to retail dealers in the State of Missouri, and in some instances in adjacent states. All of said bulk plants were supplied with gasoline by shipments by railroad tank car or by tank trucks from the storage facilities of defendant at the Kansas City, Kansas, refinery of defendant, the Okmulgee, Oklahoma, refinery of defendant, the Jefferson City, Missouri, terminal, and the East St. Louis, Illinois, terminal of the Phillips Pipe Line Company. During the years 1938 and 1939 and prior years, defendant paid the gasoline tax on the basis provided in Section 7819, R.S. Mo. 1929, on all gasoline delivered to said bulk plants.

"During the years of 1938 and 1939 defendant, from its storage facilities maintained at its refinery in Kansas City, Kansas, and at the terminal of the Phillips Pipe Line Company in East St. Louis, Illinois, transported and delivered to retail dealers in the State of *Page 364 Missouri various quantities of gasoline or motor vehicle fuel. Said retail dealers to whom gasoline was delivered by defendant during the years 1938 and 1939, were independent proprietorships. Said sales of gasoline made by defendant to said retail dealers were made upon the order of the retail dealer, either by mail, telephone or upon a preconceived arrangement to deliver a certain quantity of gasoline each week, or other period of time, to the retail dealer. The gasoline so sold and delivered into Missouri was listed on a loading ticket, prepared at the storage facilities of defendant Kansas City, Kansas, and East St. Louis, Illinois, reflecting that said gasoline was destined to be delivered into the State of Missouri, and was transported and delivered by defendant in its own motor vehicles from Kansas City, Kansas, and East St. Louis, Illinois, to the storage tanks of the retail dealers in Missouri who purchased same. Upon a sale and delivery to the retail dealer, the driver of defendant's motor vehicle in which said gasoline was transported into Missouri invoiced to the said retail dealer the gasoline so delivered. The purchase price, plus the gasoline tax due on the gallons invoiced and delivered to said retail dealer, was either paid by the retail dealer upon delivery or charged to his account on books of defendant in anticipation of payment being made therefor at a later date.

"In pursuance of the activities outlined . . . defendant, during the year 1938, transported from its refinery in Kansas City, Kansas, and from the terminal of Phillips Pipe Line Company in East St. Louis, Illinois, and sold and delivered to retail dealers in Missouri 14,012,200 gallons of gasoline, making timely reports of the items comprising said quantity to the State Inspector of Oils of the State of Missouri, and paid the full amount of the tax due thereon after deducting three per cent (3%) of the gross number of gallons transported, sold and delivered into the State of Missouri. This three per cent (3%) deduction amounted to 420,366 gallons of gasoline. Thereafter, on May 28, 1940, the State Inspector of Oils disallowed said three per cent (3%) deduction and assessed the gasoline tax on 420,366 gallons of gasoline against defendant in the sum of Eight Thousand Four Hundred Seven Dollars and Thirty-two Cents ($8,407.32), and assessed five penalties, each in the amount of five per cent (5%) of the tax, for failure to pay said tax on or before the 25th day of the month following the month in which the gasoline was transported into Missouri and sold and delivered to said retail dealers. The penalties were assessed in the total sum of Two Thousand One Hundred One Dollars and Eighty-five Cents ($2,101.85)."

The facts stipulated, as to count 2, are similar to those with reference to count 1 except that the three per cent deduction upon such sales in 1939 amounted to 411,302 gallons and the tax assessed was $8,226.04, exclusive of interest and penalties. *Page 365

Over defendant's objection, and as evidence of an administrative interpretation of Sec. 7819, R.S. 1929 (now Sec. 8437, R.S. 1939), Roy H. Cherry, State Inspector of Oils, was permitted to testify that, during his eight years in office as such officer, he had not allowed a three per cent deduction by distributors on "direct deliveries," that is, on deliveries made from outside the State by truck to distributors or dealers in this State, where the distributor making the delivery sustained no handling loss and invoiced such dealer or distributor for the full number of gallons of gasoline so transported and delivered. He further referred to "direct deliveries" as "contra-distinguished from a delivery to the transporter's own storage facilities in this state" and then a redelivery therefrom to a retailer or distributor in this State.

The cause was defended on the theory that during the years 1938 and 1939 defendant was licensed as a distributor of motor vehicle fuels in the State of Missouri and had filed its election to pay motor vehicle taxes on the alternative basis provided in Sec. 7819, supra, now Sec. 8437, supra, and that defendant had paid all such taxes on such basis and that no further such taxes could be assessed or collected on the gasoline covered by the three per cent deduction made on the gross number of gallons so transported, sold and delivered in this State.

The issue presented involves the construction of said Sec. 8437, supra, a part of which section is as follows: "Any person, distributor or dealer, as defined by this article, may elect to compute and pay the license tax provided by law to be paid on motor vehicle fuels in this state, on the gross number of gallons of such fuels received as shown by invoices thereof, or manufactured, compounded or handled by such person, distributor or dealer for use, sale or distribution within this state and on which such license tax shall not have been previously paid instead of on the number of gallons sold, and be relieved thereby from keeping accounts and making and filing statements and making payment of such tax at the time and in the manner provided by sections 8416, 8417 and 8418 of this article, by filing their election so to do with the state inspector of oils, and, if such person, distributor or dealer shall thereafter on or before the 25th day of each and every month make and file with said inspector, on forms to be prescribed by him, a statement under oath of the total number of gallons of motor vehicle fuels so received, manufactured, compounded or handled by them during the preceding calendar month accompanied with a draft payable to the state treasurer for the payment of the tax thereon, such person, distributor or dealer shall be entitled to deduct three per cent of the gross number of gallons therefrom in computing and paying said tax."

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W.2d 764, 349 Mo. 360, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-bell-v-phillips-petroleum-co-mo-1942.